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Dean Baker
CEPR / Op-Ed
Published: Tuesday 10 January 2012
“When Romney makes a comment about President Obama wanting to have equal outcomes regardless of individual effort and success, he is just speaking nonsense.”

Will Romney Lie His Way to the White House?

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Mitt Romney seems ready to wield his version of birtherism as a major weapon in the fall campaign against President Obama.  In his standard stump speech he tells audiences that President Obama wants "to replace our merit-based society with an entitlement society." According to Romney, this means a European-style welfare state that redistributes wealth and creates equal outcomes regardless of individual effort and success.

That’s pretty strong stuff, but of course this doesn’t sound anything like the President Obama who many of us have come to know and criticize. After all, this is the guy who got the top Wall Street bankers and told them that he was the only thing standing between them and the pitchforks. And, according to Ron Suskind, he assured them that he would hold his ground.

The Wall Street boys have not seen much leveling in the Obama years, nor has anyone else in the top rungs of society. It seems the substance of Romney’s complaint involves President Obama’s occasional references to "fat cats," his plans to restore the Clinton-era tax rates, and his national health care plan.

Taking these in turn, it really is touching how sensitive the rich and powerful are to being called out in public. While the men and women at the top rungs of the corporate hierarchy give the impression of being tough streetfighters who clawed and kicked their way to the top, we now find that they are actually shrinking violets who get hurt when the president isn’t nice to them.

OK, so a President Romney will not say bad things about rich people. But there is a big difference between being somewhat impolite and doing anything that threatens the wealth of the rich.

On the latter front, the staple of the Romney argument is that President Obama wants to raise the tax rate on high-income taxpayers back to the level of the Clinton years. Calling this sort of tax increase a redistribution that leads to equal outcomes regardless of individual effort and success is just nonsense.

The rich got plenty richer during the Clinton years. Romney may be too young or too old to remember, but this was the time when the stock market had its greatest rally since the 20s. There were huge fortunes made on Wall Street, Silicon Valley and other centers of the “new economy.” If this was a time when we saw equality of outcomes regardless of individual effort and success, someone forgot to tell Bill Gates, who became the richest person in the world during these years.

Finally we have President Obama’s health care plan. Yes, this will extend health care insurance to tens of millions of people who would not otherwise have it. Of course having everyone covered by health care, which the plan will not actually accomplish, is not quite the same as ending the differences between rich and poor.

And the way in which the plan extended coverage ensures that Mr. Romney’s friends in the health insurance, pharmaceutical, and medical supply industries can continue to make great fortunes in the health care industry. Romney knows this fact very well, since the plan is essentially the same plan that he put in place as governor of Massachusetts.

In short, when Romney makes a comment about President Obama wanting to have equal outcomes regardless of individual effort and success, he is just speaking nonsense. This is a gaffe, sort of like when then Sen. Obama referred to working class whites clinging to guns and religion before the Pennsylvania primary in 2008.

The difference is that Romney’s gaffe is much more fundamental to policy debates and much less grounded in reality. Serious reporters would grill Romney and his staff to determine whether Romney actually believes anything like this or whether he just makes things up out of the blue in order to advance his political ambition.

If it is the former, it would be worth exploring whether he has other entirely fanciful beliefs. For example, does he fear attacks by space aliens and plan a major military build-up to defend us against them? If it is the latter, then it would be helpful for the media to tell the public that the Republicans have nominated a candidate who doesn’t think that he can win the presidency without creating complete fantasies to advance his campaign.

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ABOUT Dean Baker
Dean Baker is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, D.C. He previously worked as a senior economist at the Economic Policy Institute and an assistant professor at Bucknell University. He is the author of several books, including Plunder & Blunder: The Rise and Fall of the Bubble Economy, The Conservative Nanny State: How the Wealthy Use the Government to Stay Rich and Get Richer and The United States Since 1980. He was the editor of Getting Prices Right: The Debate Over the Consumer Price Index, which was a winner of a Choice Book Award as one of the outstanding academic books of the year. He appears frequently on TV and radio programs, including CNN, CBS News, PBS NewsHour, and National Public Radio. His blog, Beat the Press, features commentary on economic reporting. He received his B.A. from Swarthmore College and his Ph.D. in economics from the University of Michigan.

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10 comments on "Will Romney Lie His Way to the White House?"

mRobb3 lstvwugmomvc

Stellar work there everyone. I'll keep on redinag.

Arachne646

January 13, 2012 10:39am

Ron Paul doesn't lie, but says the newsletters he published weren't his, he never read them, knew who wrote them, or knew what was in them? He never talks about his close ties with the John Birch society, or with the radical Christian Reconstructionists, the theocratic right wing Christians that Michelle Bachmann is much more publically associated with. He hasn't mentioned his virulent opposition to the Civil Rights act of 1964, in an anniversary speech on the floor of the House, either.

Ron Paul may not be for the government of the USA interfering in our daily lives quite so much--he'll leave that up to the legislators in each state, unencumbered by any inconvenient central government to enforce the US constitution.

ottenwesrola

January 11, 2012 9:27pm

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wildthang

January 11, 2012 7:02pm

It is just political bather, as we know Clinton benefited from more deregulation and free money to fire the dot.com speculative disaster the burst in his favor saving him from the ridiculous empeachment for consensual non-sex and much money wasted on lawyers in need of riches. It also produced the stamped to real estate as a safe haven?... merit based society... so you can get lawyers based on merit, insurance coverage based on merit, education based on merit.. What kind of merit? The merit of successful fleecing of society and the right to over indulgences unless you act up ans say a discouraging word or two. Merit based on the threat of it all being taken away again and being blackballed into extinction. Maybe if you are going to the poison ivy leagues to be primped and primed to rule for the ruling classes. It is a good cop bad cop coin toss and the only difference you get much of is the style of the excuses... and a few culture war scores you can look to. And patronage if you are big enough to be a player and have to fear extortion.

Astra2012

January 11, 2012 11:12am

"they all lie. They're politicians and they're wealthy. To get there lying is required. The first one is to yourself."

Sounds nice but not true. Ron Paul is most honest, consistent politiciam!

Jim Kahnweiler

January 11, 2012 5:42am

Here's a clean link to Krugman's essay:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/23/opinion/krugman-the-post-truth-campaig...

Jim Kahnweiler

January 11, 2012 5:39am

But, will Obama and the Democrats stand there like deer in the headlights as the lies crash into them; will they let Republicans, again, swift-boat them to defeat? Where is the outrage?NY Times columnist Paul Krugman has comments on Romney's prevarications: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/23/opinion/krugman-the-post-truth-campaig...

pitch1934

January 10, 2012 2:25pm

A plaid shirt does not a worker make. Romney is a charlatan.

Riconui

January 10, 2012 1:42pm

Yes, he will most certainly lie, but whether or not it gets him to the White House is another question. He lies because he has to both from his compulsion to be president and years of being the child of a aspirant to the White House. He learned it at 'is daddies knee. He of course HAS to lie because the truth of it would compel him to reveal the profound contempt he harbors for the riff-raff, the 99% as I like to think of them, that are so undeserving of access to HIS money. If he were compelled to tell the truth, he would have to reveal his arrogance and disdain, he would have to address his own phoniness and venality. So, yes, he will lie. But it's ok because they all lie. They're politicians and they're wealthy. To get there lying is required. The first one is to yourself.